Sadly I had difficulties with dd and was only able to play a little with Micks first alpha using ARM woof Debian wheezy code.
I got real recognizable sound - oh yeah
and it seems that Barry will producing a Wheezy woof build too . . .
http://bkhome.org/blog/?viewDetailed=02912

Some very interesting things are emerging.
Wot browser? We need testers and recommendations. So far I have been happiest with Chrome and Iceape (A Debian version of Seamonkey)
Because we now have a ppm other browsers can be tried. So some experiments welcome.
Mick has made the point that Midori only seems stable under Slack build. Could be.

The difficulties with dd amaze me. I use this from Slacko (5.3.3.2) and am tempted to write a utility program but frankly testing might cause more writes to my SD card than it can take.
Is it just me or it a surprisingly flaky technology, why is it so less reliable than USB keydrives?

We have the builders in at the moment.
That is mostly me in green overalls. Guttering fixed. Outside 'Dunny' concreting continues . . .
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunny
Well . . . OK no sheep skull and it flushes . . .
I rather like that skull image . . . m m m I have some deer antlers I might hang on the outside loo (english slang - originally from the French)

[Lobster rambles off into the distance . . .]_________________Puppy WIKI

We are still in Puppi alpha but the builds are progressively more complete. We will become more functional and the speed and optimisation will come. I am working on a promotional video and was delighted when database code could be just moved and work on SAP alpha 4.

The beta release published to the Google Play Store today is only
compatible with ARM systems that use the ARMv7 architecture set and
support the NEON instruction set. That means that there are several
devices — mostly those released before the Samsung Galaxy S in late
2010 — that cannot run the current beta. The major exception here is the
Nvidia Tegra platform. Nvidia’s Tegra 2 (which is a popular choice for
many Android device makers) cannot run this beta because it lacks the
NEON instruction set.

Many low end devices (as well as high end devices from 2009) use ARM
chips that utilize ARM core designs that are referred to as the ARMv6
architecture family. The ARM11 family of chips utilized this architecture.
When ARM Holdings created the new Cortex series of ARM cores, it
developed a new ARM architecture called ARMv7. ARMv6 and ARMv7 are
incompatible, as ARM made different design choices for the architectures.

..But it will have an arm v6 version soon

Quote:

Within the next few days, a version of VLC that does not depend
on NEON will become available on the Play Store, as well as a version for
ARMv6 processors.

Just placed my Raspberry Pi order (through Farnell), should arrive within 3 weeks.

Meanwhile, I'm working on more build scripts for Puppy's PET packages. So far, I have 42 packages - most of the rest (about 250 packages) is architecture-independent (e.g consisting of scripts, like Pburn), so I think progress is awesome - porting stuff to ARM was never easier _________________My homepageMy GitHub profile

started ordering at 6.00 GMT, took me more than 2 hours to finish (farnell).
Got a sales confirmation but no delivery date (they will tell me later). So I don't know, am I with the winners or not .

It's hard to wait ,
Rolf

HI rhadon, I'm there with you on that one!
I ordered my raspi 3 months ago from farnell and it took them 2 months just to tell me there is a shipping delay but very vaguely so I don't actually know whether the email is referring to 8 weeks delay from when I made my order 3 months ago or whether it's 8 weeks still to go in which case I might be lucky if it arrives in my christmas stocking?!!????
to be honest I have lost all interest in the damn raspberry pi, by the time it eventually arrives , if it ever does it will have become outdated by the
FXI Cotton Candy (a tiny computer on a usb stick) these babies are so hot they are already sold out, don't know if I could part with $74 dollars though just to end up maybe waiting just as long as I have for the Pi, well in any case on a bright note at least you live in sunny Oz and not blinking stinking muddy uk! I am at my wits end! cheers!

IDK if anyone has tried it, but the Rpi _should_ fit in a deep electrical wall receptacle enclosure (the heavy duty 22 cubic inch or larger pvc type) and still have room for a shallow outlet and maybe some custom dongles (hdmi/rca, etc...) and small usb devices (wifi/bluetooth...). even if you don't add AC sockets or put it in a wall it could be a good way to mount it out of the way, in which case you could even use the shallow type ... all for less than a buck (though not as cheap as the printable cases - still not bad)
for USA, mcmelectronics.com seems to have most of the necessities, but shipping seems high
$35 Raspberry pi$6.99 hdmi wall plate$1.79 1.5ft m-m hdmi cable$14.99 wireless keyboard and mouse$6.99 1A AC->micro usb adapter
opening up the AC adapter to connect to existing electrical would require some tech skill, perhaps someone has a better solution_________________Web Programming - Pet Packaging 100 & 101

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